Golden defends staffer with gang ties

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Critics are calling on Republican Bay Ridge state Sen. Marty Golden to fire his staffer who reportedly invited a self-described gang with ties to white supremacist organizations to a Manhattan Republican club last weekend, after the so-called “Proud Boys” were caught on video beating a protester on the street outside.

“I am horrified by the revelation that my opponent has a member of the white nationalist group Proud Boys on his payroll,” said Golden’s Democratic challenger Andrew Gounardes. “New York cannot afford to have anyone in office that associates himself with hate.”

“Ian Reilly’s presence on Marty Golden’s staff and in our community sends a dangerous message to those who perpetuate hate. Just two week ago there was a swastika found in Bay Ridge, and over the weekend a Jewish man was brutally beaten in a hate crime,” he said. “You cannot simultaneously condemn those attacks while also employing Ian Reilly, a defender of white nationalist hate groups like the Proud Boys.”

“Marty Golden has been bankrolling and palling around with neo-nazis and those who would defend them. You would think after being forced to fire his staffer Anthony Testaverde for comparing Parkland survivors to Nazis, and the community outcry he received for welcoming neo-nazi Sebastian Gorka to a Republican Party Fund-raiser in Dyker Heights, Marty Golden would stop affiliating with supporters of known hate groups,” he said. “Marty Golden should denounce Ian Reilly and fire him immediately if he truly believes that everyone, regardless of religion, race, or gender, is welcome in our community.”

Two days after this paper reached out to Golden for comment about Reilly — and following backlash for his refusal to fire him — his campaign spokesman abruptly and without an explanation cancelled Golden’s previously scheduled sit-down interview with our editorial board slated for the next day.

“Apologies all around, but we need to cancel tomorrow’s meeting with Senator Golden,” said Tobman in an e-mail when reporter Julianne McShane followed up to confirm the meeting. “Let’s circle back early next week to discuss.”

This paper has not yet heard back about when Golden will reschedule an interview as part of pre-election coverage before the Nov. 6 election, when he will face off against Gounardes, who is also scheduled to meet with this paper Friday morning.